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21 TopicsNew in Beta: App Unlock Presets + Unlock with Device for Mac
Hey everyone. We’ve got two exciting new features ready for you to preview in 1Password for Mac (Beta release channel). 🎉 🔒 App Unlock Presets A new Security Review section in the sidebar lets you quickly review and update how and when 1Password locks on your Mac. Choose from a selection of optimized presets: Convenient, Balanced, or Strict, or fine-tune settings to match how you actually use your device. 🖥️ Unlock with Device When enabled, 1Password will lock when your Mac locks, and unlock when you unlock your Mac. (No extra prompts!) It uses built-in macOS platform security to make your workflow smoother and keep your data safe. "Unlock with device" is enabled by default in two of the new presets. You can switch presets or adjust individual settings anytime in Settings > Security. What’s next? Our goal is to make 1Password work the way you do: less fiddling with settings, fewer interruptions to your workflows, and the same high level of security you expect. So we're going to roll out the new unlock experience to everyone over the course of the summer. ✅ Windows, Android, iOS, and web ✅ Support for Team and Business accounts ✅ Extensive admin controls for team-wide auto-lock settings 👉 We’d love your feedback, especially on Unlock with Device! To try out the Mac beta: choose Settings > Advanced > Release channel > Beta, and then choose About > Check for Updates. These features are currently only available in Beta for Individual + Family accounts on Mac (not Business accounts — yet!)1.4KViews4likes18CommentsImproved date formatting in the 1Password desktop app
Hello 1Password Community! With the next update to the 1Password desktop app (version 8.10.80), we have improved how date formats are handled when viewing and editing an item. Leading up to this update, there has been some inconsistency with how the desktop application has handled date formats when viewing and editing items. In some cases, date formats were being determined by the display language set in 1Password whereas in other cases, date formats were being determined by the language set against the device. This has led to some users seeing different date formats within the desktop app causing confusion. With this update, we've made things consistent by ensuring that dates saved against items always appear in a format determined by the locale set against your device (both when viewing and editing items) and never by the display language set in 1Password. This way, the desktop application can support more date formats than just the ones tied to the display languages that we support. Along with the recent improvements that we made to the date picker, we are hoping that you enjoy a much improved experience with dates in the 1Password desktop application! Thank you!1.3KViews4likes28CommentsDecember 2025 at 1Password: More browser options, easier sign-in, and safer saving and filling
Welcome to your monthly roundup of what’s new in the world of 1Password! Additional browsers now supported in 1Password for Windows 1Password now supports additional browsers on Windows including Zen, Opera, Waterfox, and Floorp. This much-requested update lets you save and autofill vault items without leaving your preferred browser. Now in beta: New sign-in experience in 1Password browser extension If you have an Individual or Families membership, you can choose to try a new feature in the beta and nightly version of the 1Password browser extension. This new sign-in experience combines all the sign-in methods – passwords, passkeys (coming soon), social logins, OIDC & SAML – into a single, simple interface focused on getting you where you want to go. To activate this in the beta or nightly version of the 1Password browser extension, go to Settings -> Autofill & save and switch on Sign in with Universal Sign On. Let us know what you think! New policies available to administrators for auto-save and auto-submit If you’re a 1Password Enterprise Password Manager administrator, you now have more granular control over filling and saving behavior: Autosave: Choose which item types 1Password can offer to save (credit cards, identities, logins, OTPs, passkeys, social logins, etc.). Autosubmit: Control whether 1Password can automatically submit forms after filling or if you want users to do that step themselves. Now in beta: Improved email options for account recovery We’re rolling out new account recovery options in beta for 1Password Enterprise Password Manager administrators . If you aren’t seeing this option yet, hang tight – you will soon. Administrators can choose to route recovery emails to specific users to get faster follow-ups and reduce email volume – or even send them to your internal IT ticketing tool. We hope this makes account recovery a simpler, faster process for everyone and would love to hear your feedback on it. The complete first season of the Chasing Entropy podcast available It’s a wrap on the first season of our new show, the Chasing Entropy podcast! This season Dave Lewis, 1Password Global Advisory CISO, sat down with dozens of CISOs and security leaders to discuss how security works in their organizations and what keeps them up at night. All episodes are available now wherever you listen to podcasts. Release note highlights Browser Extension We’ve added a new setting to manage whether 1Password.com automatically unlocks when your 1Password browser extension is unlocked. You can find the setting in the browser extension under Settings > Security > “Sign in to 1Password in the browser automatically”. Mac, Windows, and Linux Fixed a bug so Large Type no longer disappears when the display zoom is set above 100%. [Mac only]: We’ve expanded the additional browsers you can connect to the 1Password app to include browsers that use more complex background processes, such as SigmaOS and Atlas. [Windows only]: We’ve fixed an issue that caused the 1Password app to become unresponsive for 30 seconds after you turned on passkey support. [Linux only]: You no longer need to authenticate approval prompts on Wayland when 1Password is already unlocked. [Linux only]: We’ve fixed an issue that prevented the authorization prompt from appearing on Wayland. iOS, and Android We’ve moved the location of the “Unlock with device” setting under the “Unlock” heading in Settings > Security. We’ll resume our monthly highlights in January, 2026. We hope you have a wonderful end to 2025, and we’ll see you in the new year!1KViews1like7CommentsSeptember 2025 at 1Password: Browser versions, enhanced security, and new integrations
Welcome to your monthly roundup of what’s going on in the world of 1Password! Minimum browser versions increasing On October 14, 2025, we’ll be increasing the minimum Chrome/Chromium and Firefox versions required to use 1Password.com and the 1Password Browser Extension. The new minimum version requirements will be as follows: Chrome 128 Firefox 128 Edge 128 Brave 1.69.x Existing installations of the browser extension will continue to work, but affected devices will no longer receive updates until the minimum browser version has been met. New options for autofill confirmation prompts We’ve added some new security settings to the 1Password browser extension to improve security. You can now enable a confirmation prompt to appear before credentials are autofilled, helping to prevent accidental autofilling to malicious websites. A corresponding policy is also available for Administrators so they can enable this for their users. New integration for 1Password and ZScaler We recently launched a new integration between 1Password Device Trust and Zscaler to help organizations strengthen their Zero Trust security. This powerful combination ensures that employees can only access company applications from devices where the Zscaler agent is correctly installed and running. It’s a crucial step to automatically enforce security policies across all devices – including unmanaged ones – reducing your attack surface and securing your distributed workforce. Random but Memorable episodes in September How to build a career in cybersecurity with Heath Adams How cyber warfare really works with Hayley Benedict "Top skills right now, I think AI is dominating everywhere. I think that cloud is here to stay and just going to become more and more prominent... any sort of like cloud security, if you combine cloud security background with offensive security background, you're you're a golden ticket for a hire." – Heath Adams, The Cyber Mentor Release note highlights Browser Extension Fixed a bug so that 1Password remembers your list sorting preferences. We’ve added the message “1Password wants to fill your credit card details on [website name]” to the authorization prompt to fill credit card details. We’ve removed the hamburger menu from the toolbar in the 1Password pop-up. Notifications and options such as “Lock 1Password” and “Settings” are now available in a side panel, which you can open from the account menu in the top left of the pop-up. We’ve fixed an issue where the “Save passkey” prompt appeared unexpectedly on certain websites. Mac, Windows, and Linux Fixed a bug so that 1Password remembers your list sorting preferences. SSO fixes for authentication and handling email address changes. Updated dependencies to fix some bugs and improve the app’s stability. The “Scan QR code” button now works as expected when you create or edit an item. [Mac only]: We’ve fixed an issue with biometric unlock for MDM-managed devices. iOS and Android Fixed a bug so that 1Password remembers your list sorting preferences. SSO fixes for authentication and handling email address changes.914Views0likes10CommentsOctober 2025 at 1Password: Defining new standards, empowering communities, and securing the future
Welcome to your monthly roundup of what’s new in the world of 1Password! 1Password helps author a new open standard for secure credential transfer We’re proud to have helped author a new standard called Credential Exchange Format (CXF), a major step forward in secure, privacy-preserving credential transfer between password managers. CXF will enable people to move their data between password managers safely and consistently, without exposing sensitive details in the process. It’s an open standard developed with other industry leaders to promote portability without compromise. Read the announcement 1Password for Good donates $100k during Cybersecurity Awareness Month During October Cybersecurity Awareness Month, we gave back to communities by donating $100,000 USD to six organizations working to ensure that the next generation has access to the technology education, digital literacy, and online safety skills they need. It’s one of the many ways we are helping communities through our 1Password for Good efforts, including launching a cybersecurity guide for parents with the Family Online Safety Institute. Read the announcement Securing the Win: Our new docuseries with Oracle Red Bull Racing We teamed up with Oracle Red Bull Racing to explore how world-class organizations balance performance and protection. Our new Securing the Win docuseries takes you behind the scenes with the team’s leadership and IT experts. Episode 1: Inside Oracle Red Bull Racing with CEO and Team Principal Laurent Mekies Episode 2: Speed and Security with CIO Mark Hazelton Teaming up with the Utah Jazz and Utah Mammoth We’re excited to announce that we've partnered with Smith Entertainment Group (SEG) — the parent company of the Utah Jazz, Utah Mammoth, and the Delta Center as their Official Cybersecurity Partner. Professional sports franchises depend on speed, trust, and instant, secure access to stay competitive, and 1Password’s Extended Access Management suite will help SEG’s teams protect what matters most both on and off the field. Read the announcement Closing the credential risk gap for AI agents with Browserbase Together with Browserbase, we launched Secure Agentic Autofill, an integration that delivers end-to-end encrypted credentials to AI agents in the browser, only when authorized by a human. This partnership helps developers and AI researchers use LLMs securely by keeping raw credentials out of the model context. Learn more about the Browserbase partnership Introducing .env file support in 1Password environments We’ve added support for .env files in 1Password environments, now available in public beta. This update makes it easier for developers to securely load environment variables directly into local development setups, without exposing secrets in plaintext. You can import, edit, and share .env files across teams while keeping everything fully encrypted and managed in 1Password. Introducing new .env file support in 1Password environments | 1Password Random but Memorable episodes in October Episode 15.7 - The state of passkeys in 2025 Episode 15.8 - What you need to know about car hacking “When you think about the convenience of passkeys, it’s easy to forget how much work goes on behind the scenes to make them secure and interoperable.” – Random but Memorable, Episode 15.7 Release note highlights Browser Extension Fixed an issue where websites with many fields and dropdowns could crash in Chromium browsers. Localization improvements across multiple languages using new translations from Crowdin. On Safari, when you type into a field on a website, you now see a “Save in 1Password” button in the suggestions dropdown. Icons now load significantly faster throughout 1Password. Mac, Windows, and Linux Added breadcrumb navigation to the SSH Agent and CLI pages for easier navigation. Improved localization using new translations from Crowdin. Icons now load significantly faster across all apps. Fixed an issue that could prevent unlocking if the app was closed during sign-in. Improved Guided Setup with a more accurate progress bar. Visual and performance fixes, including smoother launches and rounded window corners on Mac. [Windows only]: Added group policy support using ADMX templates. [Linux only]: Fixed visual issues with prompts and app icons on Wayland. iOS and Android Improved localization using new translations from Crowdin. Icons now load significantly faster. Guided Setup now shows a more accurate progress bar. Fixed an issue that could prevent unlocking if the app was closed during sign-in. [iOS only]: Added a new keyboard shortcut to open in-app settings (Ctrl + Command + ,). [Android only]: Fixed an issue where “Lock 1Password and pause biometrics” didn’t properly lock 1Password.631Views1like7CommentsNEW! 1Password environments and Secrets syncing integration with AWS Secrets Manager
We’ve just launched our new 1Password secrets syncing integration with AWS Secrets Manager making it easier for developers and IT teams to sync secrets and environment variables from 1Password to AWS Secrets Manager. Securely and automatically sync developer secrets and environment variables from 1Password into AWS. Simplify secrets management: using 1Password environments as your source of truth for secrets and environment variables across environments Easy to use: Simplify secrets management and reduce management overhead with automatic syncing to AWS Secrets Manager Available to all 1Password password manager customers – set it up in the 1Password desktop client application via the Developer Experience tab. Learn more about the integration announcement AWS Secrets Manager is the first destination we’re syncing to. Have feedback or questions? Drop a comment below — we’d love to hear how you’re using it.502Views4likes2CommentsMay 2026 at 1Password: Native macOS AutoFill, a new developer site, and more!
In May, we introduced new features for Autofill on macOS and Android, as well import/export enhancements, and a way to create items more efficiently. We also relaunched our developer documentation hub with new quick start guides, powerful search features and a fresh domain change to match. In case you missed it macOS native AutoFill in beta We know you've been waiting for this one! In the latest 1Password for Mac beta release (version 8.12.22) we've integrated 1Password with Apple's native Passwords API. This allows your password manager to act as a system-level Credential Provider on macOS. Using the native Passwords API, alongside Universal Autofill and 1Password in the browser, will give you a more consistent filling experience across macOS. This is one of our most requested features, and we’re working hard to bring it to the production channel after the beta release. Follow these steps to try macOS AutoFill for yourself: Install the latest version of the 1Password for Mac beta. Navigate to 1Password Settings > Autofill > Set up macOS AutoFill. Select “Turn On” from the macOS permission prompt. If you’re using Safari, confirm Safari Settings > AutoFill > User names and passwords is enabled. * This feature requires macOS 14 Sonoma on Apple silicon. We’d love to hear your feedback on the update in our announcement post! Updated developer documentation Interested in setting up a service account for your AI agent, securely provisioning secrets, or managing your project’s environment variables? You’ll find in-depth guides covering all this and more on 1Password.dev, our new developer documentation hub. Our team has refreshed and reorganized the documentation to make it even easier to get started with our developer tools. We’ve also added some new get-started guides for developers, admins, and partners, as well as enhanced search functionality that lets you ask questions in plain language. 👉Read the full announcement in the Developer Community. More product updates announced this quarter If the macOS update wasn’t enough, May also brought a number of product updates including: the Autofill health check, Credential Exchange Protocol (CXP), and smarter login creation. You often need to tweak multiple system settings in multiple menus to ensure a consistent autofill experience on Android. If you miss a setting, or your device changes something without telling you, it can be tough to track down and fix the issue. Our new Autofill health check brings these settings into one place and highlights any settings that need to be changed. You might recall that we’ve been working on a new way to import and export data. This work is part of an industry wide effort to better facilitate credential migration across different systems with the CXP. That new process is now live in iOS and Android, making it easier to move everything including passkeys (yes, you can now export passkeys!) between different password managers. Last but not least: instead of starting with a blank login item, you can now type the name of widely used websites, like Reddit or Steam, into the title to prefill key fields. This not only means you can create items faster, but also helps ensure your items are filled where you use them. Random but Memorable May 7th was World Password Day! To mark this special day, we sat down with 1Password CISO Jacob DePriest to talk about the future of identity security. If you want to know where the cybersecurity industry is going, this one's for you!". In our latest episode, Gerald Auger, founder of Simply Cyber, shares his tips to stay secure during the summer travel season. The future of identity security | World Password Day special! Cybersecurity tips for the modern traveler Don’t forget to subscribe to the Random but Memorable YouTube channel! Release note highlights Browser Extension Creating a new item in the 1Password browser extension now opens a pop-up window instead of opening the full 1Password app window. Fixed an issue where you weren’t prompted to update a saved login after you changed your username on a site but kept the same password. Fixed an issue where the 1Password could lock unexpectedly after you switched tabs. Fixed an issue where 1Password in Safari could show an endless loading state when it couldn’t connect to the desktop app. Mac, Windows, and Linux You can now use Codex to interact directly with 1Password Environments using a local MCP server (currently in beta). We’ve improved support for importing your data from Bitwarden using CSV files. Secondary windows of the 1Password app will now open on your active display instead of your primary display. You’ll no longer see the option to share an item if item sharing is turned off for your 1Password account. iOS, and Android [iOS only] You can now control whether or not you’re prompted to unlock 1Password when you see prompts to save items in 1Password for Safari. [iOS only] Fixed an issue where you could see two prompts to unlock with Face ID when you selected a login to fill above your keyboard. [Android only] Fixed an issue where dates wouldn’t be localized according to your system locale settings if your in-app language was set to “Use system defaults”. [Android only] Fixed an issue where similar Identity items would be hidden from Autofill suggestions.500Views2likes0CommentsApril 2026 at 1Password: Post-quantum protection, External Checks close the access gap, and AI-era security
In April, we began rolling out new protections that will keep your data safe in a world with quantum computers, we expanded how teams can enforce access with External Checks in 1Password Device Trust, and shared new thinking on AI agents, credential sprawl, and what it takes to secure systems in a faster-moving threat landscape. In case you missed it A first step toward post-quantum security Introducing the first major milestone in our post-quantum cryptography (PQC) journey: as post-quantum protection in the 1Password web app! 1Password now supports hybrid post-quantum key exchange in PQC-capable browsers like Chrome or Firefox. It all happens automatically – no user action required. This helps protect against "harvest now, decrypt later" attacks, where adversaries capture encrypted traffic today in the hope that future quantum computers will be able to decrypt it. This is the first phase of a broader post-quantum roadmap focused on protecting your data against the threats of today and tomorrow. Read more about our first step toward post-quantum security. Building a Mythos-ready security program AI is accelerating how quickly vulnerabilities can be found and exploited, and security programs need to keep up. We looked at what security leaders can do now to prepare for a world where AI-driven vulnerability discovery happens at machine speed. The takeaway: patching still matters, but it can't be the entire strategy. Teams also need to limit the blast radius by controlling access, isolating agentic identities, replacing long-lived secrets, and making it harder for a single exploit to escalate into a larger breach. Read the full post on building a Mythos-ready security program. External Checks in Device Trust 1Password Device Trust can now factor in signals from other systems before allowing access to protected apps. With External Checks, access decisions can include more than device posture. Admins can pull in things like security training completion, policy acknowledgments, MFA enrollment, active employment status, and other verification signals from external systems. External Checks closes the gap between having a policy in place and actually enforcing it when someone tries to reach company apps and data. Learn more about External Checks in 1Password Device Trust. What we learned using AI agents to refactor a monolith We shared a behind-the-scenes look at how 1Password used AI agents to help refactor a large Go monolith. The work demonstrated how agents can be genuinely useful, especially for analyzing large codebases, building deterministic tools, and executing well-scoped changes. It also showed where they still need strong constraints, clear specifications, and human judgment. Read more about what we learned using AI agents to refactor a monolith. Protecting against OAuth-based supply chain breaches Credential sprawl continues to spread across SaaS apps, developer tools, automation workflows, and AI agents. OAuth makes it easy to connect new tools, but those connections can quietly become supply chain risks when permissions are broad, long-lived, or poorly tracked. We looked at how OAuth-based supply chain attacks happen, how Google Workspace admins can check which third-party apps currently have access, and why ongoing discovery is more effective than a one-time audit. Read more about protecting against OAuth-based supply chain breaches and credential sprawl. Chasing Entropy (Season 2) Season two of Chasing Entropy kicked off in April with three new episodes: Why secure-by-design is an incentives problem, with Bob Lord. Dave Lewis and Bob Lord get into secure-by-design principles, AI systems, software supply chains, and why security outcomes need to be owned at the organizational level. What cyber conflict reveals about power and doctrine, with Allie Mellen. Dave talks with analyst and author Allie Mellen about cyber conflict, attribution, geopolitics, and why defenders need to understand intent, not just indicators. Why friction is a security risk, with Dustin Heywood. Dave and IBM's Dustin Heywood (aka EvilMog) get into agentic AI, machine identity, quantum planning, and why security controls that add friction tend to get bypassed. Listen to Chasing Entropy wherever you get your podcasts. Random but Memorable April brought three new episodes of Random but Memorable to catch up on: What it takes to protect – and break into – data centers with Deviant Ollam Are you oversharing with AI? Author Jamie Bartlett has thoughts What to do if you’ve been hacked, with Glenn Wilkinson This month covered the physical side of security, safer AI habits, what to do after a compromise, and how supply chain attacks are feeding into one another. Release note highlights Browser extension Added settings that let you choose which item types appear as autofill suggestions in the inline menu. Reorganized Autofill settings for easier navigation. Fixed an issue where the browser extension didn’t unlock with the 1Password app. Fixed issues with the sign-in banner and Quick Access suggestions in Chrome and Chromium-based browsers on Mac. Fixed several autosubmit and website-specific autofill issues. Mac, Windows, and Linux Improved localization across supported languages. Updated the wording for unlock preset options. Fixed an issue where a LastPass import could fail if the account had multi-factor authentication enabled. Improved how 1Password recovers drafts of items. App icons shown in SSH, CLI, and SDK authentication prompts now display more quickly. [Mac only] Improved handling for shortened Apple Maps links. [Windows only] Fixed an issue where 1Password couldn’t be used as the Windows passkey manager when installed on an external drive. [Linux only] Added a “Start at login” setting, enabled by default in Settings > General. iOS and Android Improved localization across supported languages. Updated the wording for unlock preset options. Improved how 1Password recovers drafts of items. [iOS only] Fixed an issue that could cause excessive background battery use after using AutoFill. [iOS only] Fixed an issue that could prevent 1Password for Safari from unlocking. [Android only] Fixed a crash that could occur when first launching the app. 1Password CLI Added Shell Plugin support for Claude Code CLI, Scaleway CLI, AWS SAM CLI, AWS eksctl, AWS awslogs, and OpenAI Codex CLI. The AWS CDK shell plugin now supports AWS profiles that assume a role with the --profile flag. op run now properly terminates subprocesses when cancelled. 1Password CLI commands now support the Account Trust Log when authenticating with the 1Password desktop app.401Views0likes1CommentJanuary 2026 at 1Password: Taking on credential sprawl and advanced phishing scams
We kicked off 2026 with a big step forward for access governance with 1Password Unified Access, rolled out stronger phishing protection, and shipped a steady stream of fixes and improvements across every platform. In case you missed it Governing access beyond SSO with 1Password Unified Access In January, we announced the public preview of 1Password Unified Access, a new capability that helps organizations discover and govern company-owned credentials — including shared and non-SSO accounts that often fall outside traditional identity systems. Unified Access combines 1Password Enterprise Password Manager and 1Password SaaS Manager to give admins a clearer view of which apps rely on traditional credentials, who has access, and when that access should be rotated or revoked. When someone changes roles or leaves, you can revoke access and rotate credentials with a single action. For employees, the App Launcher brings both SSO and non-SSO apps into one place, making it easier to get work done without hunting for logins scattered across portals and vaults. The public preview is available to 1Password EPM Business customers in US-hosted environments with at least 100 users. 👉 Read the announcement and learn how to join the public preview. Introducing extra protection against phishing attempts 1Password has always protected you by refusing to autofill credentials on mismatched sites. But we know that sometimes you might not realize why autofill didn't work—so you'd manually copy and paste instead, which could still get you phished. Now, we've added an extra layer of protection. When you try to paste a password into a site that doesn't match the URL saved in 1Password, you'll see a warning pop-up in your browser—a gentle nudge to slow down and double-check the URL before you continue. Phishing attacks are everywhere right now, and thanks to AI, they're harder to spot than ever. Those fake login pages look almost perfect, and it only takes one quick moment to accidentally hand over your credentials to a scammer. This feature is rolling out to all Individual, Family, and Business customers over the next few weeks. For Individual and Family users, built-in phishing protection will be enabled by default. If you're a 1Password Admin, you can enable it for your team in Authentication Policies in the admin console. 👉 Learn more about phishing protection. Random but Memorable We kicked off the new year with an episode focused on cybersecurity resolutions that are actually worth sticking to! This episode turns advice from last season's guests into a practical checklist, covering small, ten-minute wins like freezing your credit, using passkeys, turning on MFA, cleaning up your digital junk drawer, and adopting a "politely paranoid" mindset to spot scams before they do damage. "If your heart rate increases, your caution should too. If a situation is urgent, contact the sender through a trusted channel, NOT the website, email, or phone number you see in the message." – Dave Lewis, Global Advisory CISO 👉 Listen to the episode Release note highlights 1Password in the Browser When setting up the 1Password extension in Firefox, you now see the permissions page first. We've improved localization for a number of our supported languages. We've fixed an issue where a scrollbar could appear unexpectedly on webpages. We've fixed an issue where the 1Password extension could break syntax highlighting for code blocks on some websites. Mac, Windows, and Linux We've fixed an issue where you couldn't interact with the prompt to turn on two-factor authentication when signing in to the app. We've improved localization for a number of our supported languages. We've fixed an issue where one-time password fields from Bitwarden login items didn't import correctly. We've updated the account icon shown in the authentication prompt when using the CLI or SDK desktop app integrations to have rounded corners. We've fixed an issue where the step to download the 1Password extension was missing from Guided Setup for individual and family accounts. We've fixed an issue where selecting the Create vault button multiple times could cause multiple vaults to be created. We've fixed an issue where items containing files could be duplicated or moved into accounts where file storage was turned off. [Mac only]: We've added Dark Mode and clear 1Password icons for macOS Tahoe. [Windows only]: You now only see the Windows Passkeys setup prompt if an unlocked account has the setting "Passkey item support" enabled. [Windows only]: We've added settings to reduce lag and choppy performance on some high refresh rate G-SYNC monitors. [Windows only]: We've fixed intermittent connection issues between the MSIX version of 1Password for Windows and the browser extension. [Windows only]: We've fixed an issue where op-ssh-sign-wsl.exe could fail to translate Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) paths to Windows paths, causing Git commit signing to fail in WSL. [Windows only]: We've fixed an issue that prevented ADMX templates from being ingested and applied in Microsoft Intune. [Linux only]: We've improved error messages and made restarting device enrollment smoother when it fails. [Linux only]: The Linux import callouts now point to the correct support article. [Linux only]: Pressing the Alt key now focuses the 1Password menu icon instead of showing the legacy menu bar. iOS and Android We've made improvements to item import and export functionality. We've improved localization for a number of our supported languages. We've fixed an issue where one-time password fields from Bitwarden login items didn't import correctly. We've fixed an issue where the step to download the 1Password extension was missing from Guided Setup for individual and family accounts. We've fixed an issue where items containing files could be duplicated or moved into accounts where file storage was turned off. [iOS only]: We've fixed an issue where search would dismiss when a recent search was selected on iPadOS 26. [iOS only]: We've fixed an issue in Guided Setup where the Autofill step couldn't be marked as complete. [iOS only]: We've fixed a visual issue with the item list menu on iOS 18. [iOS only]: We've fixed an issue where the "Pull down to search instantly" search tip was dismissed too quickly on first sign in. [iOS only]: We've fixed an issue where the search field didn't work when linking a related item, and the full list of items was shown regardless of your search. [Android only]: We've improved the password autofill experience and added passkey support for Vanadium on GrapheneOS. [Android only]: We've fixed an issue where the bottom navigation didn't restore the last selected tab after restarting the app. [Android only]: We've improved autofill in Android apps where username fields were hard to fill or didn't show suggestions.390Views1like1CommentNovember 2025 at 1Password: Access-Trust gap, planning your estate, and an updated unlock experience
Welcome to your monthly roundup of what’s new in the world of 1Password! Read our 2025 annual report: The Access-Trust Gap The Access-Trust Gap is the widening divide between the types of access that security and IT teams can control and the reality of how people, and now AI agents, access sensitive systems and data in practice. We recently published our annual Access-Trust Gap report with findings based on the responses of more than 5000 individuals working in security, IT, and knowledge-based roles. Our report presents insights on where the Access-Trust Gap is the widest, and where employees are commonly accessing resources without proper controls: 37% of employees don’t follow their company’s AI policy 52% of employees download apps without IT approval 70% of IT/IS professionals say SSO doesn’t secure employee identities Along with the report you can read three supporting articles which explore key insights in detail, and provide further recommendations on how to close the Access-Trust Gap with 1Password. Access-Trust Gap Report The enterprise AI crisis SSO is falling short Password habits are worsening Introducing a new unlock experience We’re excited to share that our updated unlock experience is now available on 1Password for Mac and Windows. This update introduces device-based unlock options as well as unlock presets that allow you to find the right balance of security and convenience. That means you can now choose to unlock 1Password with your device, use your device password to unlock 1Password, and adjust how frequently your password is required. You can find all the details in our announcement. Windows 11 Passkey Support Creating and using passkeys has been available on Windows with 1Password in the browser since 2023. Expanding our passwordless features, 1Password for Windows now offers native Windows passkey support. That means you can create and use passkeys in desktop apps, as well as in the browser, then seamlessly sync them with 1Password. If you have any questions, or are curious to learn more you can check out the announcement post here in the Community. Read our digital estate planning guide Estate planning is an important consideration for everyone. However, what often goes overlooked is a handover plan for online accounts and digital assets. This month we released our digital estate planning guide to help you make sure these important details aren’t forgotten. How will you transfer accounts with 2FA or passkeys to your family members? What will you do with accounts that are left to you in a digital estate? Our digital estate planning guide walks you through these questions and many more. You can find the digital estate planning guide, and our digital estate planning episode of Random but Memorable with Willful in our Community. Watch the latest episode of Securing the Win: Our continuing docuseries with Oracle Red Bull Racing We teamed up with Oracle Red Bull Racing to explore how world-class organizations balance performance and protection. In this month’s episodes you can push boundaries with Nimesh Kotech, read up on Matt Cadieux’s playbook, then get behind the wheel with Verstappen and Tsunodo. Episode 3: How Nimesh Kotecha pushes the boundaries of control Episode 4: Oracle Red Bull Racing CIO Matt Cadieux’s cyber resilience playbook Episode 5: Behind the wheel with Max Verstappen and Yuki Tsunoda Random but Memorable Episode 15.9 - Why you need a digital estate plan (and where to start) Episode 16.0 - How to avoid online shopping scams Release note highlights Browser Extension There are new unlock settings available for the 1Password browser extension. If you don’t integrate the browser extension with the 1Password app, select 1Password in your browser’s toolbar, then select the account menu > Settings > Security to manage your settings. We’ve fixed an issue where websites with many fields and dropdowns could crash in Chromium browsers when using the 1Password browser extension. Localization has been improved for a number of our supported languages using new translations from Crowdin. We’ve fixed an issue where business passkey policies prevented personal accounts from filling passkeys while 1Password was locked. Mac, Windows, and Linux We’ve fixed an issue where 1Password would open in front of other windows after a silent MSIX update. [Windows] We’ve fixed an issue that prevented rich SSH and CLI prompts from appearing on Wayland. [Linux] If duplicates are detected when you import environment variables, you can now choose to ignore, overwrite, or keep both. We’ve expanded the additional browsers you can connect to the 1Password app to include browsers that use more complex background processes. [Mac] When you view an Environment in 1Password, updated wording now distinguishes between temporarily revealing variables and changing their default visibility. We’ve fixed an issue that caused comma-separated URLs in code blocks within Secure Notes to change when you saved them. In-app updates are now blocked for MSIX system-wide installs and Microsoft Intune-managed deployments to avoid issues tracking 1Password’s install state, update failures, and de-provisioning. [Windows] iOS, and Android There are new unlock settings and presets available for the 1Password app, including Unlock with device. You can manage these settings in the app under Settings > Security. If biometric unlock fails, you can now use the SSO login option instead. [iOS] We’ve fixed an issue that caused comma-separated URLs in code blocks within Secure Notes to change when you saved them. We’ve fixed an issue where you couldn’t select the “Sign in” button after you changed your account email, and an issue where your Secret Key wouldn’t pre-populate after you changed your account password. [Android]321Views1like0Comments